Apprentices

Darth Bane was a humanmaleDark Lord of the Sith and the sole survivor of the destruction of the Sith at the hands of the Jedi Order during the Jedi–Sith war, a thousand years before the Clone Wars. As the only surviving Sith, Bane recognized that Sith infighting had weakened them to the point that the Jedi could destroy them. To rectify this, Bane reformed the Sith and created the Rule of Two, mandating that there could be only two Sith—a Master and an apprentice—at any given time. These new Sith would begin a plot to destroy the Jedi in secret. Bane was later defeated by the Jedi, who wrongly believed that the Sith were defeated with him.

Recognizing that it was infighting that destroyed the Sith, Bane created a new Sith philosophy, the Rule of Two, in which there could be only two Sith at a given time: a Master to embody power and an apprentice to crave it. Bane took on an apprentice of his own and began passing on his knowledge, all while establishing the new Sith way of pursuing power and revenge against the Jedi through manipulation and subterfuge. The Jedi learned of Bane's new philosophy and, while defeating Bane himself, falsely believed that they had destroyed the Sith forever. However, Bane's plans continued through his apprentice.[2]

During the war, Jedi Grand MasterYodaventured to Moraband on a journey to discover the secrets of immortality. He entered Darth Bane's tomb and encountered a fiery vision of the ancient Dark Lord.[5] The vision,[8] conjured by the Force Priestesses[9] as part of Yoda's trial to learn the power of immortality,[8] attempted to convince the Jedi Master to turn to the dark side. Yoda refused, remarking that Bane was dead and that what appeared before him was simply an illusion who had nothing to offer. Yoda's defiance banished the specter back into the sarcophagus, while Yoda continued on his journey.[5]

The war's end saw the culmination of the Sith's millennium-long vendetta against the Jedi. Sidious declared himself Emperor and reformed the Republic into the Galactic Empire. To destroy the Jedi, Sidious issued Order 66, a command implanted in the clone troopers of the Grand Army of the Republic to kill the Jedi as traitors. In addition, Sidious turned to the dark side Jedi KnightAnakin Skywalker, believed by the Jedi to be the Chosen One of prophecy who would destroy the Sith. The plans that started with Darth Bane had thus been fulfilled.[7]

The Sith victory was short-lived, however, as Sidious met defeat[10] twenty-three years later.[11] A redeemed Skywalker killed the Emperor, resulting in his own death[10] but also ending the rule of the Sith[12] that Darth Bane had set in motion over a thousand years earlier.[2]

Personality and traits

Darth Bane was a human.[3] Having witnessed the destruction of the Sith, Bane believed that their infighting and greed led to their downfall. In order to preserve the Sith as its last survivor, Bane adopted the Rule of Two,[5] believing that limiting the number of Sith to one Master and one apprentice would allow the Sith to survive in secret so they could plot their revenge against the Jedi.[13]

Behind the scenes

Creation

Darth Bane was nearly depicted in the Star Wars: The Clone Wars episode "Ghosts of Mortis," based on his Legends appearance.

The Clone Wars

"My son Nathan knew the history of Darth Bane, because I didn't really realize how he fit into the scheme of things."

―Mark Hamill, who voiced Darth Bane, speaking of his knowledge of the character[src]

During the writing of "Ghosts of Mortis," the seventeenth episode in the third season of the television series Star Wars: The Clone Wars, Lucas wanted to include two ancient Sith Lords who could serve as an "uber evil influence guiding the Son," the villain of the episode. The production team decided that Darth Revan, the main character of the now-Legends video gameStar Wars: Knights of the Old Republic, and Bane would be the two Sith Lords. The two characters were styled and modeled for "Ghosts of Mortis" based on their appearances in the Expanded Universe, but the scene, despite being laid out, was never animated. Dave Filoni, the show's supervising director, was apprehensive of the idea that Sith Lords could return as spirits, believing that Bane and Revan's appearance would have greater implications than the episode was exploring. Lucas thought about it as well and eventually agreed that the scene should be removed from the episode due to those implications on his ideas about the Force.[17]

Character concept of Darth Bane, as seen in The Clone Wars episode "Sacrifice"

The unrealized scene, called "Son Confers with Ancient Sith Lords" and released in an uncompleted form on the "Jedi Temple Archives" feature for Star Wars: The Clone Wars The Complete Season Three, depicts Bane and Revan speaking to the Son in the Well of the Dark Side on Mortis. The Son, who has been guided by the two Sith Lords in the past, questions why he feels pain over the events of the two previous episodes, "Overlords" and "Altar of Mortis," and the Sith Lords tell him it is because he has not embraced his pain and resentment. When the Son demands to know their true identities, the two spirits reveal themselves as Bane and Revan and tell him that controlling Anakin Skywalker, the Chosen One, is the key to controlling the galaxy.[18]

Despite being cut from "Ghosts of Mortis," a specter of Darth Bane appeared in "Sacrifice," The Clone Wars series finale. Cutting the previously planned appearance allowed the show's team to redesign the character and define what Bane would look like in the official Star Wars canon. Concept art for the character was created by Darren Marshall, which included full armor as well as a "Sith warrior lightsaber pike."[19] In the episode, Bane's specter was voiced by Mark Hamill, best known for his portrayal of Luke Skywalker.[5] Prior to taking on the role of Bane, Hamill did not know of the character or how Bane fit into the overall arc of Star Wars. His son Nathan Hamill knew about the history of the character and was able to explain it to his father once he took on the role.[20]